National Post (National Edition)

Trump aimed mob `like a loaded cannon' at Capitol

Democrats, defence file briefs ahead of trial

- RICHARD COWAN AND DAVID MORGAN

WASHINGTON • Lawyers for former U.S. president Donald Trump said on Tuesday the U.S. Senate has no authority to try him as a private citizen on an impeachmen­t charge that he incited an insurrecti­on at the Capitol on Jan. 6, while the Democratic lawmakers who will serve as prosecutor­s urged his conviction.

Both sides filed briefs with the Senate a week before the impeachmen­t trial is due to begin. Nine House lawmakers said Trump pointed a mob “like a loaded cannon” at Congress and said he should be convicted and barred from holding public office in the future.

Trump's defence team said that no only does the Senate lack the authority to put Trump on trial as a private citizen but that the chamber also lacks the jurisdicti­on to prevent Trump from holding office again.

“President Trump's conduct offends everything that the Constituti­on stands for,” the Democratic impeachmen­t managers wrote in an 80-page brief noting that Trump had begun voicing his intention to contest an election loss months before the Nov. 3 election was held.

“He summoned a mob to Washington, exhorted them into a frenzy, and aimed them like a loaded cannon down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue. As the Capitol was overrun, President Trump was reportedly `delighted,'” they said.

During his Jan. 6 speech, Trump repeated false claims that the election was fraudulent and exhorted supporters to march on the Capitol, telling them to “stop the steal,” “show strength” and “fight like hell.” The rampage interrupte­d the formal congressio­nal certificat­ion of Democrat Joe Biden's election victory and sent lawmakers into hiding for their own safety.

“The Senate must make clear to him and all who follow that a president who provokes armed violence against the government of the United States in an effort to overturn the results of an election will face trial and judgment,” the Democratic managers added.

Trump is just the third president to have been impeached, the first to be impeached twice and the first to face trial after leaving office. Members of the 100-seat Senate will serve as jurors in his trial.

Convicting Trump would require a two-thirds majority, meaning 17 Republican­s would need to join the Senate's 50 Democrats in the vote. That presents a daunting hurdle. Last week, 45 of the 50 Republican senators voted in favour of a failed bid to dismiss the impeachmen­t charge as unconstitu­tional because Trump has left office.

A conviction could lead to a second vote banning Trump from holding public office again.

The Tuesday deadline for briefs in the case came just days after he parted ways with his initial legal team amid a reported dispute over how to respond to the charge. Trump is still making false claims of a stolen election.

One of Trump's recently hired lawyers, David Schoen, called the impeachmen­t process “completely unconstitu­tional” in an interview with Fox News on Monday but did not outline the former president's legal strategy.

“I think it's also the most ill-advised legislativ­e action that I've seen in my lifetime,” Schoen said. “It is tearing the country apart at a time when we don't need anything like that.”

In their brief, the Democratic impeachmen­t managers said the Senate has jurisdicti­on to try Trump now because the House impeached him while in office for acts he committed as president.

“There is no `January exception' to impeachmen­t or any other provision of the Constituti­on,” the managers said. “Presidents do not get a free pass to commit high crimes and misdemeano­urs near the end of their term.”

The brief made no mention of any witnesses the managers planned to call during the trial.

A group of Republican former officials rebutted the argument that the trial was unconstitu­tional in an open letter released on Tuesday.

It is “essential to focus the nation on the gravity of what Mr. Trump did,” the group said in a statement.

The three dozen former officials signing the letter included former governors Christine Todd Whitman and William Weld, and Carter Phillips, assistant solicitor general under former president Ronald Reagan.

 ?? SHANNON STAPLETON / REUTERS ?? A pro-Trump mob storms the U.S. Capitol during a rally
in Washington on Jan. 6 that resulted in five deaths.
SHANNON STAPLETON / REUTERS A pro-Trump mob storms the U.S. Capitol during a rally in Washington on Jan. 6 that resulted in five deaths.

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